On Saturday, May 25, 2002, at 10:43 PM, Michael Bryan Bell wrote:
A) Physical Characteristics
The fit and finish of the tibook was enhanced quite a bit for the Rev.
B.
Most of the major problems with batteries, drive alignment, etc were
fixed.
The chassis was also significantly
A) Physical Characteristics
The fit and finish of the tibook was enhanced quite a bit for the Rev.
B.
Most of the major problems with batteries, drive alignment, etc were
fixed.
The chassis was also significantly stiffened to help prevent the massive
flexing that could occur with the first
that the Rev B was MUCH FASTER for audio I guess it's all a trade
Sorry, I meant REV A -- was faster for audio.
off, the Firewire and Graphics card is much faster for Rev B.
This part is correct.
Everything I have read has said that it was the opposite, that while the
rev.B has
In a message dated 5/23/2002 11:14:45 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
The weirdest thing is before I bought my TiBook, all I heard is how
good the units were. After I received it, then I mistakenly went on
the Apple forum site and man. I've never seen so many problems
with an Apple
On Saturday, May 25, 2002, at 09:19 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
How can you tell a Rev. A from a Rev. B in the Titanium powerbooks?
Visually, they're about the same. The PowerBook G4 Titanium (which
everyone refers to as Rev A) has vent slots in the middle of the rear
panel, between all
On Saturday, May 25, 2002, at 09:19 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
How can you tell a Rev. A from a Rev. B in the Titanium powerbooks?
Visually, they're about the same. The PowerBook G4 Titanium (which
everyone refers to as Rev A) has vent slots in the middle of the rear
panel, between